2 Stocks That Cut You a Check Each Month
Key Points
Collecting monthly dividends is like replacing a paycheck.
Net lease giant Realty Income is a slow and steady tortoise with a lofty 5.6% yield.
Agree Realty is a growth-focused net lease REIT with a 4.2% yield.
Your investment needs change when you switch from building your wealth to trying to live off of your savings. Suddenly, income is a much more important factor in the investing equation.
Monthly dividend payers like Realty Income (NYSE: O) and Agree Realty (NYSE: ADC) not only provide income, but the frequency of the dividend is almost like replacing a paycheck. Here's a look at each of these high yielders and why you might want to buy them.
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What is a net lease REIT?
Realty Income and Agree are both net lease real estate investment trusts (REITs). A net lease requires the tenant to pay most property-level expenses for the property they occupy. This gives the tenant effective control of the property and leaves the landlord free to just collect rent checks.
That's a bit of a simplification, but the key here is that net lease properties are often created when a company sells a property and then instantly leases it back in what is known as a sale/leaseback transaction.
Why do that? Because a sale/leaseback net lease deal is usually a financing transaction for the seller. It allows them to raise cash for other purposes, like growing their business.
REITs like Realty Income and Agree benefit because they usually get reliable tenants, long lease terms, and built-in rent escalators. It's pretty close to a win/win deal. You can add an extra win here, too, because shareholders of these two REITs have gotten reliable dividends out of the equation.
What's the difference between Realty Income and Agree?
The core focus on both Realty Income and Agree is net lease retail properties. In this way, they are competitors. However, Realty Income is a far larger business, with more than 15,600 properties compared to Agree's roughly 2,500 assets. There are some important differences that flow from the size discrepancy here.
Realty Income is so large that it has had to diversify its portfolio. The first notable issue is that industrial and "other" assets make up around 25% of rents. But it has also reached across the pond, expanding its geographic reach to Europe.
The goal is to have as many levers for growth as possible. It simply takes more transaction volume to grow a huge portfolio. In fact, Realty Income has even branched out into some nontraditional net lease areas, like data centers, debt, and investment management.
Realty Income is a slow and steady tortoise, but the company is working hard to make sure that it can continue to grow its dividend in the future as in the past. At this point, Realty Income's dividend has been increased every year for 30 years, a streak that includes 110 quarterly increases. The yield is a very attractive 5.6%.
Agree Realty is much smaller, and its focus is much smaller, too. It basically only invests in retail properties in the United States. That's not a bad thing. The U.S. net lease retail property market is quite large, and there's plenty of room for Agree to keep expanding its portfolio. And given its small size, it doesn't take nearly as much to grow the business as it would take to grow Realty Income.
With a larger growth opportunity ahead of it, Agree Realty tends to trade at a premium to Realty Income. Notably, Agree's dividend yield is 4.2%. However, over the past decade, Agree's average annualized dividend growth rate was around 5%, compared to roughly 3.5% for Realty Income.
That may not sound like a large difference, but it adds up over time. Agree is a good choice for those who favor income growth over income now.
Perhaps buy them both?
If you are looking to replace a paycheck with a monthly pay stock, both Realty Income and Agree will fit that bill. Add in attractive and well-above-market dividend yields, and the story gets even better.
That said, the best choice here may not be picking one or the other. It could be buying them both, so you can find a balance between maximizing the income you generate with protecting your income stream from the ravages of inflation.
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Reuben Gregg Brewer has positions in Realty Income. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Realty Income. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.